Local practices and production confer resilience to rural Pacific food systems during the COVID-19 pandemic

Caroline E Ferguson, Teri Tuxson,Sangeeta Mangubhai,Stacy Jupiter,Hugh Govan,Victor Bonito, Semese Alefaio, Maxine Anjiga,Jonathan Booth,,Delvene Boso,Ambroise Brenier,Akanisi Caginitoba, Ana Ciriyawa, Joeli Bili Fahai'ono,Margaret Fox,Andy George,Hampus Eriksson,Alec Hughes, Eugene Joseph, Sean Kadannged, Eferemo Kubunavanua, Sesimani Loni,Semisi Meo,Fiorenza Micheli,Elizah Nagombi, Rebecca Omaro,Anouk Ride, Annisah Sapul,Ann Singeo, Karen Stone,Margaret Tabunakawai-Vakalalabure, Marama Tuivuna, Caroline Vieux,Vutaieli B Vitukawalu, McKenzie Waide

Marine Policy(2022)

Cited 18|Views34
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Abstract
Resilience of food systems is key to ensuring food security through crisis. The COVID-19 pandemic presents an unprecedented shock that reveals varying levels of resilience of increasingly interconnected food systems across the globe. We contribute to the ongoing debate about whether increased connectivity reduces or enhances resilience in the context of rural Pacific food systems, while examining how communities have adapted to the global shocks associated with the pandemic to ensure food security. We conducted 609 interviews across 199 coastal villages from May to October 2020 in Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, and Tuvalu to understand community-level impacts and adaptations during the first 5–10 months of the COVID-19 crisis. We found that local food production practices and food sharing conferred resilience, and that imported foods could aid or inhibit resilience. Communities in countries more reliant on imports were almost twice as likely to report food insecurity compared to those least reliant. However, in places dealing with a concurrent cyclone, local food systems were impaired, and imported foods proved critical. Our findings suggest that policy in the Pacific should bolster sustainable local food production and practices. Pacific states should avoid becoming overly reliant on food imports, while having measures in place to support food security after disasters, supplementing locally produced and preserved foods with imported foods when necessary. Developing policies that promote resilient food systems can help prepare communities for future shocks, including those anticipated with climate change.
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Key words
Coronavirus,Small-scale fisheries,Disaster,Food security,Resilience,Traditional knowledge and practices
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